U.S. DOT Unveils Full List of TIGER II Winners
The complete list of TIGER II grants has been released by U.S. DOT today, after members of Congress revealed many winners last week. In keeping with the department's livability goals, the list is filled with transit projects (especially streetcar lines), efforts to bolster the country's non-trucking freight network, and fix-it-first projects aimed at deteriorating roads and bridges.
October 20, 2010
Report: Want to Ease Commuter Pain? Highways and Sprawl Won’t Help
Imagine two drivers leaving downtown to head home. Each of them sits in traffic for the first ten miles of the commute but at that point, their paths diverge. The first one has reached home. The second has another twenty miles to drive, though luckily for her, the roads are clear and congestion doesn't slow her down. Who's got a better commute?
September 29, 2010
APTA Report Prescribes Public Transport to Improve Public Health
Transit use is correlated with decreases in the number of traffic crashes. Image: “Evaluating Public Transportation Health Benefits” A new report written by the Victoria Transport Policy Institute’s Todd Litman for the American Public Transit Association [PDF], the trade organization for the nation’s transit agencies, reminds us that one of the most valuable benefits of … Continued
August 20, 2010
Walk Score Goes Multimodal With the Addition of Transit Score
One
of the simplest and best tools for promoting walkable development has
branched out into the full range of car-free transportation. Walk Score,
the website which measures how many neighborhood amenities are within
walking distance of a given location, has added a wealth of information
about other forms of travel, including transit and cycling. The improved
Walk Score provides a more complete sense of what is accessible from
your apartment or workplace.
August 18, 2010
Delaware Gov Signs Bill to Protect Cyclists and Pedestrians
Yesterday
brought a big victory for street safety and traffic justice in
Delaware, as Governor Jack Markell signed SB 269, the state's vulnerable
users law. Jeff Peel, writing on the League of American Bicyclists
blog, explains:
August 13, 2010
New York City Gets Its First “Pop-up Café,” Similar to SF’s Parklets
The narrow streets of Lower
Manhattan date back centuries and pose a set of challenges nearly unique
in New York City. With the city's first "pop-up café," DOT is testing
out a solution to one of those challenges: the lack of public space
caused by cramped sidewalks.
August 12, 2010
Chicago Commuter Rail Spends Big on Trucking
Transit funding these days is, needless to say,
scarce. Across the country, transit agencies are slashing services to
cope with the gaping fiscal holes left by the recession. More than ever,
every dollar counts.
August 11, 2010
House Approves Transpo Spending Bill After Stripping Out $ for Livability
The
House of Representatives passed its 2011 appropriations bill for
Transportation and Housing and Urban Development yesterday,
significantly increasing the amount going to both highways and transit
while decreasing spending overall. A fight over $200 million in funds
for the Obama Administration's new livability initiatives, however,
showed that substantive changes in federal transportation policy will
remain difficult to achieve until Congress tackles the long-term
transportation reauthorization bill.
July 30, 2010
500 Square Miles Lost to New Jersey Sprawl Over 20 Years
The last decade has often been heralded as a "back to the cities"
moment, a time when Americans have been excited to return to the
walkable lifestyle many abandoned two generations before. A new report
from New Jersey's Rutgers and Rowan Universities throws a little cold
water on that optimism, though, pointing out that even the most densely
populated state in the Union sprawls further out into the countryside
every year.
July 30, 2010
Sales Tax Hike Could Save Olympia’s Transit System
It
may be the middle of summer, but if you're paying attention, it's
already election season. With a string of primaries leading into
November's main event, voters will consider transportation issues from
now through the fall. In some races, like for California governor, it's one of many hot-button topics being debated by the candidates. In others, transportation is right there on the ballot.
July 28, 2010